McCullough Hayden (egyptearth7)
ct database PRJNA660154.Although reduced ambient lighting ("dim" light) can cause myopia in emmetropizing chicks, it does not necessarily lead to myopic changes in emmetropizing rhesus monkeys. Because myopia is rarely spontaneous, a question remained whether dim light would hasten the progression of visually induced myopia. To determine the effects of dim light on the development of and recovery from form-deprivation myopia (FDM), seven 3-week-old infant rhesus monkeys were reared under dim light (mean ± SD = 55 ± 9 lx) with monocular diffuser spectacles until ~154 days of age, then maintained in dim light with unrestricted vision until ~337 days of age to allow for recovery. Refractive errors, corneal powers, ocular axial dimensions and sub-foveal choroidal thicknesses were measured longitudinally and compared to those obtained from form-deprived monkeys reared under typical laboratory lighting (504 ± 168 lx). Five of the seven subjects developed FDMs that were similar to those observed among their normal-light-reared counterparts. The average degree of form-deprivation-induced myopic anisometropia did not differ significantly between dim-light subjects (-3.88 ± 3.26D) and normal-light subjects (-4.45 ± 3.75D). However, three of the five dim-light subjects that developed obvious FDM failed to exhibit any signs of recovery and the two monkeys that were isometropic at the end of the treatment period manifest abnormal refractive errors during the recovery period. All refractive changes were associated with alterations in vitreous chamber elongation rates. It appears that dim light is not a strong myopiagenic stimulus by itself, but it can impair the optical regulation of refractive development in primates.Microbial selenite reduction has increasingly attracted attention from the scientific community because it allows the separation of toxic Se from waste sources with the concurrent recovery of Se nanoparticles, a multifunctional material in nanotechnology industries. In this study, four selenite-reducing bacteria, isolated from a river water sample, were found to reduce selenite by > 85% within 3 d of incubation, at ambient temperature. Among them, strain NDSe-7, belonging to genus Lysinibacillus, can reduce selenite and produce Se nanospheres in alkaline conditions, up to pH 10.0, and in salinity of up to 7.0%. This strain can reduce 80 mg/L of selenite to elemental Se within 24 h at pH 6.0-8.0, at a temperature of 30-40 °C, and salinity of 0.1-3.5%. Strain NDSe-7 exhibited potential for use in Se removal and recovery from industrial saline wastewater with high alkalinity. This study indicates that extremophilic microorganisms for environmental remediation can be found in a conventional environment.Selenium (Se) is both an essential micronutrient and a contaminant of concern that is of particular interest in mining-influenced waterbodies in Canada. The objective of this research was to characterize the trophic dynamics of selenium along a gradient of exposure concentrations in a Canadian boreal lake ecosystem. From June 20 to August 22, 2018, six limnocorrals (littoral, ∼3000 L enclosures) were spiked with mean measured concentrations of 0.4, 0.8, 1.6, 3.4, 5.6 and 7.9 μg Se/L as selenite, and three limnocorrals served as untreated controls (background aqueous Se = 0.08-0.09 μg/L). Total Se (TSe) concentrations in water, periphyton, phytoplankton, sediment, benthic macroinvertebrates, zooplankton and female finescale dace (Phoxinus neogaeus; added on day 21 of the experiment) were measured throughout and at the end of the experiment. Total Se bioaccumulation by organisms was generally non-linear. Greater uptake by phytoplankton than periphyton was observed. Taxonomic differences in accumulation of TSe by invertebrates (Heptageniidae = Chironomidae > zooplankton) were observed as well. Fish muscle and ovary tissue TSe bioaccumulation was more variable than that at lower trophic levels and uptake patterns indicated that